I'll keep this all in mind. I don't plan to become a Cisco expert over night. Flirts I'll try to make them use Asterisk. I don't know the details yet. But some of these big organizations don't even want to consider anything other than the proprietary systems.
Zeeshan A Zakaria -- www.ilovetovoip.com On 2010-09-14 4:23 PM, "David Backeberg" <dbackeb...@gmail.com> wrote: On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 3:56 PM, Zeeshan Zakaria <zisha...@gmail.com> wrote: > Now I have no previous experience with Cisco systems and don't want to screw > up anything. Are th... sometimes. Cisco supports "SIP", but depending on the product, asterisk inter-networking with call transfers / dials / etc. can be, ummm, interesting, and you have to do Transfer() rather than Dial() if you want subsequent transfers / conferencing, etc. to work within Cisco. Basically, call setup / control and RTP aren't necessarily on the same device(s) which is the opposite of my asterisk experience. > I guess the underlying VoIP technology is the same for both the systems so it > shouldn't be hard... sometimes. Again, the size of the deployment is relevant here. > Any ideas, suggestions. I'd appreciate your help as what to look for, where to start from. Again, at some point you'll need to call a reseller. In the meantime, if you want to keep them honest, you should get your hands on paper or digital copies of the Cisco press books about their phone system products. Can't recommend anything specific without knowing things about size and purpose of the install. -- _____________________________________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocati...
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